Veo Grabs $12M, Led by GV & Lux, to Help Industrial Robots “See”

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True artificial intelligence is likely decades away, if it ever comes. In the meantime, companies are making robots “smarter” in less dramatic ways that nevertheless could prove quite useful.

Veo Robotics is one of the players trying to boost the intelligence of industrial robots by enhancing their perception and responsiveness to their surroundings—thereby making it easier and safer for them to work alongside humans.

“Our goal is to have humans be at home in the world of machines,” says Veo co-founder and CEO Patrick Sobalvarro.

Today, Veo’s vision got a $12 million jolt from investors. The Series A funding round was led by Lux Capital and GV, the venture capital arm of Google’s parent company, Alphabet. Some of the money came from an earlier Veo backer, Next47, a venture firm created by manufacturing giant Siemens. Lux’s Bilal Zuberi and GV’s Andy Wheeler will join Veo’s board.

Cambridge, MA-based Veo has now raised $13 million in total venture capital, Sobalvarro says.

“What we’re seeing is the value of human labor in manufacturing is going up tremendously, so that manufacturers can be more responsive to market needs,” Sobalvarro says. “If you have a 100 percent automated [manufacturing] line, you’re not going to be able to adapt.”

What he means is that companies are producing a wider variety of goods these days, and they’re often custom orders. That means factory lines are constantly being reconfigured—something that requires humans, Sobalvarro says.

Veo’s plan is for robots and humans to handle the tasks that best suit their strengths. Machines will lift heavy parts and perform repetitive tasks, while humans will focus on work that requires creativity and judgment, as well as tasks that would be difficult and costly to automate, Sobalvarro says.

Veo certainly isn’t the only company trying to make industrial robots more sophisticated and able to work closely with humans. Universal Robots and Rethink Robotics—where Sobalvarro served as president a few years ago—are two others working in this area.

To ensure their robots don’t hurt the people working alongside them, some companies have limited the force their robots can exert and the speed at which they move, Veo says. Meanwhile, most of the large, powerful, and fast-moving industrial robots aren’t capable of adjusting their movements when people get close, so the robots are enclosed in cages for safety purposes, and they must be shut off in order for humans to enter the work station.

Veo’s team thinks they have figured out a solution that doesn’t require those tradeoffs. The company aims to free powerful and speedy robots from their cages by equipping them with 3D sensors and software—effectively, “eyes” and “brains,” Sobalvarro says—that enable the machines to safely operate with humans in close proximity.

“In order to make big robots collaborative, they need to be intelligent and perceptive,” he says. He’s talking about robots that can lift anywhere from 100 pounds to more than 4,400 pounds. “If they were to bump into you, it would be too late already,” he adds.

Here’s a possible scenario for using Veo’s system: A robot equipped with its technology could lift up a refrigerator door and hold it in place while a human tightens the screws to attach it to the refrigerator.

I visited Veo’s office a few months ago and saw one of its prototypes in action. As the robotic arm moved around, I reached out to touch it. When my hand got close, … Next Page »